like rk said, the oe design coil is capable of putting out all the voltage that these engines need and then some. I'm running stock coils on both my sv8 engines, one in conjunction with a crane points eliminator module and one with breaker points. Both engines start easily and run smoothly up to max engine speed. Just because the marketing smoke blow for a performance coil says it is capable of outputting 40,000 volts, doesn't mean the engine ignition system will be able to utilize that amount. Granted, you realized some noticeable improvement when you switched, which was quite likely just a compensation that temporarily counterbalanced some fixable weakness elsewhere in the system. Is the battery fully charged? Is sufficient voltage reaching the coil + terminal? Has any consideration been given to the spark plugs and how they're gapped? How about the plug wires? What is your base timing set to?
Well, here's a quick rundown. Ran like a dream for the first 500 or so miles. All new ignition including coil, plugs, wires, cap, rotor, etc., were on it when I got it. When the sputtering and misfiring started, I found and fixed lots of little things as I diagnosed it. Here's a quick rundown; disasterous wiring under the dash, all now replaced, carefully following the diagram in my vintage mitchell's manual. Bulkhead connector eliminated, though it didn't look bad at all. Ford starter relay conversion. New ignition switch. (it took a couple of tries before I found a good one. Though I'm not ruling out the possibility that this one isn't really that good either) rebuilt the carb. Base timing was at zero, but seemed to run better at 10 degrees. No traces of plug wire arcing, or cracks in distributor cap or coil tower. Coil gets 12 volts. No discernible vacuum leaks, all hoses checked and vacuum port plugs replaced. Power brake booster verified good. Battery verified as good and is kept well charged.
I've been through this thing forwards and backwards and its driving me nuts. The engine appears to be a recent rebuild, and by how smooth it idles (when it runs right), I'd say its balanced. I have no idea if the po upped compression on it, and that it needs better fuel and/or ignition to help it run right, or not. It's a 345-e motor, and the truck shows it was a 304 by the tag under the hood. So obviously not original.
Anyway, after going through this thing, the only two things that got it back to running as it should was the edelbrock afb and the blaster 2 coil. Every other thing I did was either negligible or temporarily better, at its best. So I lean towards increasing the fuel/air flow and sparking the crap out of it with the msd. Once I have it worked out, I'm going to GM TBI. But then again, that might solve my problem too. Argh!!! What could I possibly be forgetting,.. Aside from checking the green wire? Lol!